Many Nebuloni families crowded the footwear production in the Parabiago area over the past century: some are still active, others are only a fading memory, like MILENA's Fratelli Nebuloni Shoe factory.

They started at the beginning of the Twentieth Century and over the years, the shoe factory MILENA produced under different brands/lines such as: “Milena” (1947), “Holiday” (1953), “Fratelli Nebuloni”, “Bortoloni”, “La Subacquea” (1956), “Subacquatic” (1958), “Bijou”, “G.T.Man”....

The last name change came post mortem due to a parody/tribute: the comedy "Che not tribulada!” [dialect for What a troubled night!] staged a few years ago by the Parabiago theater company, “I Sempr'Alegher” [again, dialect for Always Happy], was loosely based on the Nebuloni’s story, here renamed "The TENCIUNI”.

“La Subacquea” ("The Underwater") brand ruled the company's success in the '50s. It was a patent for a waterproof and ice-resistant shoe for men's dress shoes, but also used in casual/sport footwear. Milena shoes were part of the Italian expedition's uniform sponsored by Milan's Cai and Friars Minor Angelicum Film. They sailed from the port of Genoa, April 20, 1958 aiming to open new passages on the tops of the Andean Cordillera Apolombaba.

In those same years, the Nebuloni Brothers promoted the brand through trade fairs, including the local Parabiago Footwear Exhibition (from 1954 to 1959). Many awards came in the Sixties with the work of shoe designer Mauro Nebuloni. In 1967 they won the first prize at the Turin's International Footwear Academy led by the Commendator Agostino Puccio. The Academy gave the Nebuloni Brothers the Oscar for the best men dress and sporty shoe plus the Certificate of Honour for their contributions to the footwear art.

The following year the Academy gave the Milena Shoe Factory the Gold Medal at the first International High Fashion Leather Olympics.

In 1971, the Nebuloni Brothers were among the first signatories of the new mark "genuine leather".